crossed the Red Sea and took con-
trol of lands on the southwestern
Arabian Peninsula.
Aksum Controls International
Trade Aksum’s location and expan-
sion made it a hub for caravan routes
to Egypt and Meroë. Access to sea
trade on the Mediterranean Sea
and Indian Ocean helped Aksum
become an international trading
power. Traders from Egypt, Arabia,
Persia, India, and the Roman Empire
crowded Aksum’s chief seaport,
Adulis (AHD•uh•luhs), near pre-
sent-day Massawa.
Aksumite merchants traded
necessities such as salt and luxu-
ries such as rhinoceros horns,
tortoise shells, ivory, emeralds,
and gold. In return, they chose
from items such as imported cloth,
glass, olive oil, wine, brass, iron,
and copper. Around A.D. 550,
an Egyptian merchant named
Cosmas described how Aksumite
agents bargained for gold from
the people in southern Ethiopia:
PRIMARY SOURCE
They take along with them to the mining district oxen, lumps of salt, and iron, and
when they reach its neighborhood they... halt... and form an encampment, which
they fence round with a great hedge of thorns. Within this they live, and having
slaughtered the oxen, cut them in pieces and lay the pieces on top of the thorns along
with the lumps of salt and the iron. Then come the natives bringing gold in nuggets like
peas... and lay one or two or more of these upon what pleases them.... Then the
owner of the meat approaches, and if he is satisfied he takes the gold away, and upon
seeing this its owner comes and takes the flesh or the salt or the iron.
COSMASquoted in Travellers in Ethiopia
A Strong Ruler Expands the Kingdom The kingdom of Aksum reached its
height between A.D. 325 and 360, when an exceptionally strong ruler, Ezana
(AY•zah•nah), occupied the throne. Determined to establish and expand his author-
ity, Ezana first conquered the part of the Arabian peninsula that is now Yemen.
Then, in 330, Ezana turned his attention to Kush, which already had begun to
decline. In 350, he conquered the Kushites and burned Meroë to the ground:
PRIMARY SOURCE
I carried war against [them] when they had rebelled.... I burnt their towns of stone
and their towns of straw. At the same time, my men plundered [stole] their grain, their
bronze, their iron and their copper, destroyed the idols in their homes, their stocks of
corn and of cotton; and they threw themselves into the river.
KING EZANA OF AKSUM,quoted in Africa: Past and Present
226 Chapter 8
Analyzing Primary
Sources
Why don’t the
traders speak to
each other instead
of laying down
goods or gold?
Recognizing
Effects
How did
Aksum’s location
and interactions
with other
regions affect
its development?
R e d S e a
Gulfo
fAde
n
Nil
eR
.
Blu
eN
ile
Atb
ara
R.
Lake
Tana
Mediterranean
Sea
ARABIAN
PENINSULA
SAHARA
To India
To African
interior
To Europe
Aksum Adulis
Meroë
Thebes
Mecca
Memphis
Berenice
Jerusalem
Aden
Zeila
NUBIA
(KUSH)
EGYPT
AKSUM
50
°E
10 °N
20 °N
30 °N
Tropic of Cancer
40
°E
30
°E
0
0
250 Miles
500 Kilometers
Aksum kingdom
Trade routes
Aksum, A.D. 300–700
GEOGRAPHY SKILLBUILDER: Interpreting Maps
1.LocationWhat nearby waterways enabled Aksum to become a
major trading center?
2.MovementTo which continents or countries did Aksum’s trade
routes give it access?